“We think this would be a good way to attract neighborhood restaurants interested in displaying some healthy food,” department spokeswoman Lisa Seitz Gruwelltold the Examiner. “It would also be an outlet to bring in extra revenue to the department.”

What parks the vendors would be allowed to set up in is not clear. The City currently allows vendors to sell food in Golden Gate Park and in the Civic Center. But each vendor would pay the department a minimum of $1,000 per month, according to the paper. And only healthy food would be allowed to be served.

The price and the healthy clause may force some of the small vendors currently Tweeting their next selling spot around the City out of the picture.

“It would be hard for an independent vendor to make that monthly payment,” the Crème Brûlée Guy, who has not made his name public because he operates illegally, told the paper. “It would be a lot easier for a restaurant owner to just send out an employee to sit there for eight hours.”